What Do You Get When You Buy a Record from Analogue Productions?

Skeptical Thinking Can Help You Identify Records with Better Sound

What do you get when you buy a record on the Analogue Productions label?

In the simplest terms, you get a record that’s met with Chad’s approval.

Since Chad appears — at least to me! — to have no critical listening skills to speak of, he must instead rely on the assurances of the engineers who did the work for him that yes, they indeed succeeded in making him a record of the very highest quality. Their assurances — opinions might be the better word — are then backed up by those that market and review the very same record. Everyone operating in his capacity within this circular chain gets paid to agree that Chad’s records are indeed of the highest quality, exactly as would be expected by those who know how they were made. (Confirmation bias — hearing what you expect to hear — is surely the most powerful tool at the disposal of those who make and market audiophile records.)

Having played many of Chad’s records going all the way back to the mid-90s, let’s just say we see things a little differently.

We believe that what ends up happening with any given release is that if the engineers he hired to make the record do a bad job, Chad releases a bad sounding record. If they do a decent job, Chad releases a decent sounding record. If they do a good job — woops, scratch that, they never do a good job.

As far as Chad is concerned, every one of them sounds great, because he can’t tell a good record from a bad one. He assumes they must be great because he paid top dollar for the best engineers and then spared no expense for the best practices they recommended to press them, all in order to produce what they assured him would be a superior product in every way.

Unfortunately, Chad had no way of determining if those assurances were ever of any real value. Turns out they weren’t.

Like a lot of audiophiles, Chad is a guy who never taught himself how to listen critically. He never saw the point in building a stereo from the ground up, one component at a time,  tuning it and tweaking it until it sounded right on his most difficult-to-reproduce test records. How could he? He doesn’t own any. He doesn’t even know what they are or why anyone could possibly need such things.

Instead of earning the knowledge he very clearly needed to judge the records he was making, he borrowed it from the so-called experts he was paying to do the work. Everybody knows the conventional wisdom is never wrong, right?

Unlike yours truly, he never engaged in the slow, painstaking efforts, over the course of decades, that are required to make real audio progress. That’s simply not part of his audio history. He bought whatever system the experts told him to buy and, since they’re the experts, it’s by definition great at playing records. Why wouldn’t it be? It cost a lot of money!

All Chad really needs to know about the record business is that there are titles that record collectors will buy, and if he hires who he thinks are the right mastering engineers to make them and the right pressing plants to press them, they will sell.

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On This Rachmaninoff Title, the Right Reissues Clearly Have the Best Sound

More of the music of Sergei Rachmaninoff (1873-1943)

Until we heard the right later pressings, we had always been disappointed with this TAS List recording, wondering what all the fuss was about. The original Shaded Dog pressings we had played left a lot to be desired. Like many of the old records we audition, it badly lacked both highs and lows, our definition of boxy sound.

Well, now we know.

The earliest Shaded Dog pressings have consistently worse sound than the reissues we offer.

We never offered the record in Hot Stamper form because we didn’t think the sound of the originals was all that impressive, TAS List or no TAS List.

Mystery solved, and truly Hot Stampers have now been made available to the discriminating audiophile.

Harry’s list, as was so often the case, did not provide the information needed to find the pressing that captured all the qualities of the recording the way this one does.

Did Harry have a good later pressing?

Did he have an original and simply liked it more than we did?

Who knows? Like so much in the world of records, it’s a mystery.

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Direct Hits – Not Bad on Track, Awful on Classic Heavy Vinyl

More of The Who

This is a very nice looking original Track Black Label British Import LP. As anyone who knows the Who’s back catalog can attest, most of these songs were poorly recorded. Like all compilations, the sound here varies from track to track. Side two definitely has the better sound.

We guarantee that this pressing sounds better than the Classic reissue, which was so bad we never carried it.

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Tchaikovsky on UHQR – What Happened to the Colors of the Orchestra?

Hot Stamper Pressings of the Music of Tchaikovsky Available Now

This is what we had to say about the Telarc UHQR back in 2005 or so:

Having played this record all the way through, I can say this about it:

It’s about the most dynamic recording I’ve ever heard.

This was the promise of digital, which, as we all know, was never really delivered. On this record, that promise has been fulfilled. The performance is also one of the best on record. It’s certainly the most energetic I can remember. 

UPDATE 2015

Now that we’ve heard the best pressings of the Alwyn recording on Decca, I would have to say that Alwyn’s is certainly every bit as energetic if not more so, and dramatically better sounding as well.

In other words, in 2005 we had a lot to learn. Boy, did we ever.

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Clarity Comes at a Price

Hot Stamper Pressings of the Music of Sergio Mendes Available Now

UPDATE 2026

Many years ago we were impressed with the sound of some of the later pressings of Sergio’s albums.

It turns out that we were wrong about those later pressings being better than the early ones, which are the ones we tend to like these days, mostly because our all tube system from the 90s was much darker and dramatically less resolving than the one we use now.

Although we didn’t know it at the time, there was still a long way to go and hundreds of more records to play before we could call our system reasonably accurate. Discovering this cartridge and learning how to tweak it — using the right records — took our playback to a level we had never imagined it could go.

That was about twenty years ago. Before then I was lost as lost could be, something I recognize in my fellow hobbyists, especially the ones who write about records as if it were 1982.


Here is what we liked about the reissues in the 80s and 90s.

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Rachmaninoff / Dohnanyi – Rhapsody On A Theme Of Paganini / Variations On A Nursery Tune / Katchen

More Classical and Orchestral Recordings

  • This early London pressing (the first to ever hit the site) of Katchen and the London Phil’s performance boasts lush and tubey Shootout Winning Triple Plus (A+++) sound or close to it from first note to last
  • It’s also impossibly quiet at Mint Minus to Mint Minus Minus, a grade that practically none of our vintage classical titles – even the most well-cared-for ones – ever play at
  • The piano is huge and weighty, the strings rich and highly resolving, and the overall presentation is powerful, balanced, dynamic and exciting
  • These sides are doing practically everything right – they’re rich, clear, undistorted, open, spacious, and have depth and transparency to rival the best recordings you may have heard

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Chet Atkins – Hometown Guitar

More of the Music of Chet Atkins

  • Hometown Guitar makes its Hot Stamper debut with INSANELY GOOD Shootout Winning Triple Plus (A+++) grades throughout this original RCA pressing
  • Both of these sides are sweet and rich with plenty of Tubey Magic, wonderfully breathy vocals, deep punchy bass, and a super extended top end
  • Full-bodied and warm, exactly the way you want your vintage analog to sound – the guitar is surprisingly real here

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The Glorious Sound of Tubes in 1963

UPDATE 2026

In 2018 we put up a killer Hot Stamper pressing of Big Band and Quartet and had a few thoughts about the sound of the best copies we played.


On this record, more than most, the tubes potentially make all the difference. 

Keep in mind that we are referring specifically to 1963 tubes, not the stuff that engineers are using today to make so-called “tube-mastered” records.

Today’s modern records barely hint at the Tubey Magical sound of a record like this, if our experience with hundreds of them is any guide. We, unlike so many of the audiophile reviewers of today, have a very hard time taking any of the new pressings seriously. We think our position is pretty clear, and we have yet to hear more than a stray record or two that would make us want to change our minds.

If you’ve ever heard a pressing that sounds as good as this one, you know there hasn’t been a record manufactured in the last forty years that has this kind of sound.

Right, wrong or otherwise, this sound is simply not part of the modern world we live in.

[Well, not quite, but close.]

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Letter of the Week – “I called off a meeting, poured a whiskey, and let it rip.”

Hot Stamper Pressings of the Music of Bruce Springsteen Available Now

One of our good customers had this to say about a White Hot Stamper pressing he purchased recently:

Dear Tom,

My White Hot Stamper of Born in the USA arrived today.

I called off a meeting, poured a whiskey, and let it rip.

How nice to be able to finally hear one of the albums I’ve listened to the most in my life.

Hearing where the backing vocalists are standing on Darlington County was a revelation.

Aaron

Dear Aaron,

Thanks for your letter.

Yeah, Born in the U.S.A. is a tough one — so much distortion and processing make for a tough shootout!

We would be foolish to make claims for “audiophile quality” sound on Springsteen’s albums — they are what they are. The simple claim we make for our Hot Stampers is that the best of them sound as good as the album can sound, and we back that up with a 100% Money Back guarantee.

Born in the U.S.A. is yet another example of an album that must be graded on a curve.

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Three Copies of Harold in Italy and Still No Luck

Hot Stamper Pressings of Living Stereo Titles Available Now

For a Living Stereo record from the Golden Age of All Tube recording, especially one from the late-50s, you might expect that the better Shaded Dog pressings would have exceptionally rich, natural sound.

After all, 1958 is clearly one of the great years for analog recordings, as evidenced by this amazing group of albums, all recorded or released in that year.

Unfortunately, the pressings we played of the Berlioz album you see pictured were quite a letdown. We dropped the needle on three different early copies of LSC 2228 with three different sets of stampers and found that none of them were all that impressive, as can be seen from our notes:

  • First: tubey but pretty hot, just okay. (6s/3s)
  • Second: smeary and congested, not great. (4s/4s)
  • Third: tubey but smeary (3s/1s)

We guessed that their final grades after a shootout would probably fall into the range of 1+ or so, just below the cutoff for a minimal Hot Stamper grade (1.5+).

If we’d half a dozen or more to play, some copies would probably be a bit better, some would be a bit worse, but the bulk of them would end up having sound that was merely passable, even after a good cleaning. (Without a good cleaning some might not even earn that single plus.)

For now we’re throwing in the towel and moving on to Golden Age records with better prospects.

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